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Evaluation of Chinese medicinal herbs fingerprinting by HPLC‐DAD for the detection of toxic aristolochic acids
Author(s) -
Heaton James,
Whiley Luke,
Hong Yingzi,
Mary Sebastian Chinnu,
William Smith Norman,
LegidoQuigley Cristina
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of separation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.72
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1615-9314
pISSN - 1615-9306
DOI - 10.1002/jssc.201000905
Subject(s) - aristolochic acid , fingerprint (computing) , chromatography , high performance liquid chromatography , chemistry , traditional medicine , biology , medicine , computer science , artificial intelligence , genetics
Aristolochic acids are known to contribute to various renal disorders; therefore, expanding the availability of analytical methodology to detect these compounds is important in order to assess the quality of Chinese herbal medicines in which they can be found. Twelve medicinal herbal samples were procured from various sources and extracted in duplicate prior to a “fingerprint” analysis using conventional HPLC‐DAD. Multivariate analysis was performed on the entire chromatographed fingerprints. The resulting output was a partial least‐square discriminant analysis model, which was able to evaluate the potential presence of aristolochic acids I and II as well as providing an individual herbal “fingerprint”. The results of this study provide evidence that the presence of aristolochic acids contained within certain herbal extractions could be detected using a simple method, although some limitations apply to this method for quality control, since newly detected samples for aristolochic acid (positives) will need further confirmation with purity checks or MS hyphenation.